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Exhibition

Lovely Lacquerware of Japan

Exhibition Overview

Japanese Lacquerware by Yuko Asanuma

For generations, lacquerware has been an essential element in the Japanese way of life to such an extent that in some countries, the name for lacquerware utensils is “Japan.”

This lacquerware includes simple wooden bowls, tea utensils such as natsume, elaborately patterned lunch boxes, hair combs, and hairpins, to name but a few. Furthermore, the word shikkoku (the color of black lacquerware) evokes a clear and deeply penetrating beauty in the minds of Japanese people.

However, many of the items that are called “lacquerware utensils” today are imitations which are made to look like lacquerware through the use of chemical paints, and this has led to a steady disappearance of genuine lacquerware products which are made using tree sap.

Most of Asanuma’s works feature pictures which take their inspiration from children’s fairy tales and picture books. She continue to create work on these familiar themes in the hope of achieving greater affinity with both children and adults alike.

Gallery

About the Artist

Yuko Asanuma

Profile
Born in Hokkaido
Graduated Bunka-Gakuin, Faculty of Art
Studied under Junkan Kinoshita and Urara Makino
Member of Japan Cultural Property Urushi Association